Realism in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.doc
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1、 毕业论文(设计)Realism in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn1.Introduction12. Realistic themes in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn32.1 Characterization32.1.1 Huck32.1.2 Jim72.2 Slavery92.2.1 The bad treatment of slaves92.2.2 White adults attitude to slaves102.2.3 Hucks attitude to slaves122.2.4 Jims att
2、itude to slaves132. 3 Exposition of objectivity142.3.1 Fatuity152.3.2 Money worship163. Conclusion17References181.IntroductionThe Civil War broke out in 1861, which marked a change in America. Before the Civil War, America had essentially a rural, agrarian, isolated republic, whichs idealistic, conf
3、ident, and self-reliant inhabitants for the most part believed in God. Most Americans had a strong view that America was the most democratic and civilized country in the world. After the Civil War, the United States was transformed into an industrial and urban nation. On the surface there were elega
4、nce, security and comfort; but underneath there were all seething disconcert and disappointment. Great wealth and economic power became more and more concentrated in the hands of the few. So the nation became a land of contrasting wealth and poverty; political and commercial corruption grew widespre
5、ad. All these made its people begin to question the assumptions shared by the transcendentalists-natural goodness, the optimistic view of nature and man, benevolent God. In the meantime, people of the United States began to tire of the sentimental feelings of the Romanticism after the Civil War, jus
6、t as they turned away from Puritanism at the close of the 18th century. A new inspiration came over them. Instead of thinking about the mysteries of life and death, peoples attention was now directed to the interesting features of everyday existence. Life itself held a challenge. A zest for living n
7、aturally, completely, and even boisterously became the vogue. This new attitude was characterized by a great interest in the realities of life. Therefore, a new attitude of realism entered American literature, which started a new period in American writing known as the rise of Realism (Wang Songnian
8、, ed.2004). As time passed, Romanticists optimism was replaced by philosophical realism. With Howells, James, and Mark Twain active on the scene, realism became a major trend in 1870s and 1880s of American Literature.Realism is the theory of writing in which familiar aspects of contemporary life and
9、 everyday scenes are represented in a straightforward or matter-of-fact manner. Fundamentally, in literature, realism is the portrayal of life with fidelity. It stresses truthful treatment of material. It is anti-romantic, anti-sentimental, and without interest in nature, death, etc.In the later par
10、t of 19th Century, a crowd of realists appeared in European Continent, such as Zola, Flaubert, Balzac, Destoyvsky and Tolstoy. They sought to portray life as it really was, insisting that the ordinary and the local were as suitable for artistic portrayal as the magnificent and the remote. Such a str
11、ong wind flew over the Atlantic Ocean, and landed on the North American Continent. American readers or audiences got “hungry” about such mental food. They hoped for getting a vast reading of articles, essays, fictions and poems. It was realism writers such as William Dean Howells, Mark Twain who met
12、 such a strong demand (Zhang Xihua, 1996).Mark Twain, known as the Lincoln of American Literature, wrote many books which reflected the American society. As his masterpiece, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn won him the fame all over the world. In this ever-lasting popular book, Mark Twain dealt wi
13、th many serious subjects in his time such as politics, religion and slavery.The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is about an outcast boy Huck and a runaway nigger Jim on the journey down the river. Huck is the narrator and main character of the novel. Slavery and other social evils are exposed by the
14、disreputable, illiterate little boy. He isnt influenced by civilization, so he has no cunning and sophisticated life philosophy. His sense is spontaneous. He views the society in his childish way and never exaggerates anything he has seen, heard and experienced.2. Realistic themes in The Adventures
15、of Huckleberry Finn2.1 CharacterizationOne of the features of realism is that realism focuses on the commonness of the lives of the people who are customarily ignored by the arts. Therefore, Mark twain often showed the basic goodness and wisdom of ordinary people as his major theme and revealed the
16、common personality and spirit by portraying “specific persons or facts” (Liao Fucai, 2000), such as Huck and Jim.2.1.1 HuckHuck is looked upon as an outcast. He has no mother, no home, “sleeping in barrels, eating scraps and leavings and dressed in rags” (Yang Jie, 1998). He has a father, however, h
17、is father has never taken care of Huck but given him cruel beating. There is no doubt that Huck is just like an orphan. As an orphan, Huck suits in a hard environment. Although he receives hardly any education, he learns to be active, intelligent, honest and brave from the hard society.Huck is a reb
18、el of American society. He is used to his free life no need to pray before dinner, no need to go to school and to church. It seems that the “civilized society” does not fit Huck at all. Therefore, when the pecking of Miss Watson becomes unbearable and the deadly dull life tires him, he flees. He reb
19、els mainly because those “kind-hearted and civilized” people make him uncomfortable and ill.Twain wrote stories about how ordinary people tricked experts, or how the weak succeeded in hoaxing the strong (Liang Qing, 1994). There is no doubt that Huck is a master at this point. In Chapter 16, Huck co
20、mes upon some men in a boat who want to search his raft for escaped slaves. In order to protect Jim from being catching, Huck pretends to be happy and makes the following dialogue to trick them into believing that his father on board the raft has smallpox. The following dialogue can express this poi
21、nt clearly.“Papll be mighty much obleeged to you, I can tell you. Everybody goes away when I want them to help me tow the raft ashore, and I cant do it by myself.”“Well, thats infernal mean. Odd, too, say, boy, whats the matter with your father?”“Its the-athe-well, it ains anything much.”They stoppe
22、d pulling. “Well,” says I, a-blubbering, “Ive told everybody before, and they just went away and left us”(2003, p108-109).By tricking the two men, Huck not only rescues Jim, but also wins forty dollars in gold.Also, Huck is filled with self-recrimination and self-condemnation (Quirk Tom, 2000). When
23、 Jim is bitten by the dead snakes mate, Huck is sorry for the outcome and his stupidity, because the dead snake is put into Jims blanket by him.Though Huck is young, his wisdom and goodness and honest consciousness is not restricted to the innocence or the childish vision of a young boy (Liang Qing,
24、 1994). From the novel, we can find clearly that Huck is a good boy who has humanistic care. In Chapter 33, after being proven to be deceivers, the duke and the king run out of town on a rail, tarred and feathered. Huck feels sad, although both of them have done many unregretful things to lots of pe
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